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Tuesday 18 Feb, 2014
http://jrnl.ie/1321655

Taoiseach: New York St Patrick’s Day parade ‘about our Irishness and not about our sexuality’

“I understand that about 500,000 people participate in the St Patrick’s Day parade in New York. I don’t know how many of those are gay and lesbian people and that is a matter for themselves,” Enda Kenny told the Dáil this evening.

Higgins asked if Kenny would “go along with the homophobic, disgraceful approach by some of these conservative Irish-American institutions” and also described the United States as “the biggest imperial power on earth” during his contribution.

He asked Kenny: “What is it about United States presidents that so mesmerises politicians in Ireland?”

Kenny said it is not a case of being “mesmerised”, but engaging with people who have or who hold high office “and who are interested in engaging with our country”.

The Taoiseach said that he hopes to travel to America and added: “The St Patrick’s Day parade is a parade about our Irishness and not about sexuality and I would be happy to participate in it.”

He later said that the organisers set down regulations for the way the parade is conducted .

But he faced criticism from the People Before Profit TD Richard Boyd-Barrett (above) who asked if the Taoiseach would wear a rainbow badge in solidarity with the LGBT community.

Kenny responded: “I understand that about 500,000 people participate in the St Patrick’s Day parade in New York.

“I don’t know how many of those are gay and lesbian people and that is a matter for themselves. I don’t express anything about their sexuality.”

As Boyd-Barrett pointed out that “about ten per cent” of participants would be gay and lesbian, Kenny added: “I will be certainly very happy to wear the symbol of Irishness on St Patrick’s Day in New York.

“That is called the shamrock. As I said the parade is about our Irishness and not about our sexuality”.

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